English

A-polynomial, B-model, and Quantization

High Energy Physics - Theory 2012-06-13 v2 Algebraic Geometry Quantum Algebra

Abstract

Exact solution to many problems in mathematical physics and quantum field theory often can be expressed in terms of an algebraic curve equipped with a meromorphic differential. Typically, the geometry of the curve can be seen most clearly in a suitable semi-classical limit, as 0\hbar \to 0, and becomes non-commutative or "quantum" away from this limit. For a classical curve defined by the zero locus of a polynomial A(x,y)A(x,y), we provide a construction of its non-commutative counterpart A^(x^,y^)\hat{A} (\hat x, \hat y) using the technique of the topological recursion. This leads to a powerful and systematic algorithm for computing A^\hat{A} that, surprisingly, turns out to be much simpler than any of the existent methods. In particular, as a bonus feature of our approach comes a curious observation that, for all curves that come from knots or topological strings, their non-commutative counterparts can be determined just from the first few steps of the topological recursion. We also propose a K-theory criterion for a curve to be "quantizable," and then apply our construction to many examples that come from applications to knots, strings, instantons, and random matrices.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1108.0002,
  title  = {A-polynomial, B-model, and Quantization},
  author = {Sergei Gukov and Piotr Sułkowski},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1108.0002},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

58 pages, 5 figures, minor modifications, references added

R2 v1 2026-06-21T18:44:08.069Z